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Michigan, because of its westward position in the Eastern time zone (and its being so far north), has very late sunrise and sunset times.I used to go to the little hamlet of Hell, Livingston County every Father’s Day weekend from 2003-2007. Legal sunset there was around 9:15 PM just before the summer solstice, and it didn’t get dark until 10 PM. Sunrise and sunset are a full 45 minutes later than Philadelphia.

Second the motion on Scandinavian summer. Walking back to the hotel from a restaurant in Oslo at 11:45 in dusk, no streetlights. Copenhagen, Denmark, families with children (including us) having pastry and tea and coffee in the Tivoli gardens at midnight.

If it makes you feel any better, we’re now having both breakfast and dinner in the dark.

My professional association announced a few years ago that we were meeting in Alaska in a couple years … with great rates for travel and accommodations. You guessed it— January. Web check gave us about three hours of full daylight.

About Frazz

Frazz by Jef Mallett follows the adventures of an unexpected role model: an elementary-school janitor who's also a Renaissance man. While he's sweeping the hall, he's whistling Beethoven. Or Lyle Lovett. He paints the woodwork in the classrooms; he paints a Da Vinci on the cafeteria wall. He's a trusted authority figure who is every kid's buddy. He took the janitor's job while he was a struggling songwriter, and when he finally sold a hit song, he decided to stay on at school. Frazz appears in 200 newspapers worldwide, including the Los Angeles Times, Seattle Times, Chicago Tribune and Detroit News. "A few years back, I wrote and illustrated a children's book," says Mallett. "When I was traveling around reading it at school assemblies, I noticed that often, the most respected, best-liked grown-up in the building was the janitor. And I thought, 'Hmm, there's a comic strip in that.'" Often praised for its intelligent wit, gentle spirit and effortless diversity, Frazz won a Wilbur Award from the Religion Communicators Council in 2003 and 2005 for excellence in communicating values and ethics.